Have you
ever arrived to your new duty station and felt like you stepped onto foreign soil?
Oh, maybe the base felt mostly familiar with its military-standard housing and
the buildings that all look the same from the outside. But the town around you?
Or the lack of the town around you? You know you are still on US soil, but
nothing feels familiar. Or safe.
We were
stationed outside of Boston 19 years into my husband’s career. It was a great
move for him and we were able to live on base on the outskirts of the outskirts
of Boston. But nothing felt easy or familiar. I was petrified of driving
anywhere. I thought for sure our boys and I would be stuck at home for a year
because I didn’t know how to manage a 4-lane round-about. And that was in the
outskirts of the outskirts! Don’t even get me started on actually driving in
the city! The first time we ventured downtown, I was navigating and pointed
above our heads and exclaimed, “We are supposed to be up there!” By the time I
finished my sentence, we came flying out of the tunnel we were in and had to
choose 1 of 5 streets immediately in front of us. The navigation app had not
been able to keep up in the tunnel, so I had no idea where to tell my husband
to go. We circled a 5-block radius several times before realizing we had put in
the wrong destination!
We are both
from Iowa. THIS felt foreign!
Maybe you
are reading this and thinking, “I’m from a big city. None of that scares me!”
But you are stationed in the middle of the Northern tier, surrounded by fields
and livestock or snow and ice and that is what feels foreign to you.
I met a
milspouse from Brazil. She and her husband were stationed in Seattle and were
then sent to Malmstrom AFB in Montana. When I asked her how she felt about that
change, she said, “I cried for two months after we got here.”
When I asked
another milspouse how she felt about being stationed in Montana, her response
was, “Not good. Not good at all!”
I think it
would be safe to say that Montana felt quite foreign to these milspouses!
What can we
do to embrace where we are sent when we are sent to a “foreign” land on US soil?
When you show up and the only people you know are your husband and your kids or
your furry friends? Or maybe you show up alone? Then what?
Some
sure-fire ways to NOT embrace your current situation include: crying daily;
complaining loudly and often; throwing a pity party; inviting everyone around
you to feel sorry for you; declaring over and over how much you hate it there.
Have you met those people? Are you one of them?!
I can assure
you that when those are your responses, they will become self-fulfilling
prophecies. It will be your worst assignment ever. How do I know this? Because
I have thrown a pity party or two. I have hidden and cried in the bathroom of a
new home more times than I would like to admit.
So, how do
we embrace our foreign-land-on-US-soil assignment? Here are some tried and true
methods of embracing your new location when nothing feels familiar or safe (How
do I know this? Because I have experienced their success first-hand!):
Try
something new! The
Brazilian spouse I met? She didn’t keep crying. She and her husband decided to
flip a house while they are stationed in Montana. This particular hobby has
potential to pay dividends beyond just trying something new!
Get
involved! Whether it is a church, a group, a
Club or a gym. Find a place to be active. The first thing we look for even
before we arrive to a new base is a church. Our family knows that if we can
find a place to worship, we will find like-minded people and we will most
likely make life-long friends.
Give
back! Our first
duty station was a 9-month school as far away from home as we could get and
still be in the continental United States. At the time, it didn’t seem worth it
to find a job, but I needed to do something to fill my days, so I
volunteered at the base’s Airmen and Family Readiness Center. I spent a few
hours each week putting together packets to welcome newcomers. It wasn’t
glamorous work, but I enjoyed it because I learned quite a bit about the base
and the surrounding area and I got to know the kind people at the AFRC who
wanted to help military families.
Take a
risk! Use social
media to your advantage. Many milspouses are using social media to their
advantage and introducing themselves on the spouse Facebook page of their new
base. They are making connections and getting invited to play groups, craft
groups, wine clubs and more!
Ask your
friends if they know anyone at your next assignment and ask them for an online
introduction to their friend. After being in the military for 23 years, we know
people stationed all over. I take full advantage of that by having a friend
introduce me to her friend on FB Messenger. We establish the beginnings of a
friendship long before we meet in person. My last neighbor was a close friend
before we ever arrived.
No
matter what else you try, always, always, ALWAYS, find your people. Some of you are thinking, “But I’m
not good at making friends! I am shy/introverted/awkward.” Yep, me too. Walking
into a room of complete strangers is still one of the hardest things for me to
do. I am super awkward when it comes to small talk (although I have gotten
better with practice) and I never know how to gracefully end a conversation.
But I make myself do it anyway because I know from experience that my new best
friend might be at that event and I won’t meet her if I don’t go.
I tell our
boys all the time, “Look for the new people. Remember how it felt when you were
new and be the person you needed someone to be for you.” You may be the new one
for the moment, but let’s face it, you are only the new one for a week or a
month before the next new one moves in. Watch for the moving trucks. Say Hi.
Take cookies—even if they are store bought!
How will you
embrace where you have been sent? Where can you find your people? At the end of
the day, it has always been the people and my attitude that make or break an
assignment for me.
Remember that
traffic I thought I would never drive in? It took me about two weeks to gather
my courage to drive off-base, but then I was free! Free to explore what the
area had to offer. Free to take our boys on adventures. Free to embrace the
foreign-land-on-US-soil we had been sent to.
But I never
did master the round-abouts.
So much YES! Established hatred prior to a move is prejudiced behavior. Find one thing you like and hang onto that until you find another and another...:)
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